U.S. U-20 Women’s National Team Draws with China PR 1-1 in Group D of 2012 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup

The U.S. Under-20 Women’s National Team dominated China PR in almost all aspects during their Group D match of the 2021 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup but only came away with one point in a 1-1 draw on Thursday at Hiroshima Big Arch Stadium.

IN THE IMAGE: Maya Hayes points to the bench as the team celebrates her 36th minute equalizer

Maya Hayes Scores Fourth Goal of Tournament, 16th International Tally

U.S. Looks to Clinch Quarterfinal Berth with Win or Draw Against Germany on Aug. 27 in Final Group D Match

USA Travels to Miyagi for Group Finale Against Fellow Two-Time Champion Germany Live on ESPN2 and ESPN3 at 2:50 a.m. ET

HIROSHIMA, Japan (Aug. 23, 2012) – The U.S. Under-20 Women’s National Team dominated China PR in almost all aspects during their Group D match of the 2012 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup but only came away with one point in a 1-1 draw on Thursday at Hiroshima Big Arch Stadium.

The USA inched a bit closer to a quarterfinal berth with the draw and now sits in second place in Group D with four points. Germany defeated Ghana 1-0 in the first match of the evening to take the lead in the group with six points and clinch a quarterfinal berth. China (1 point) sits in third place while Ghana was eliminated after losing their second straight match.

The USA can advance to the quarterfinals with a win or a draw against Germany in their final Group D match on Monday, Aug. 27, at Miyagi Stadium in Rifu, Japan. The match, which features the event’s only two-time champions in the USA (2002 U-19 and 2008 U-20 titles) and Germany (2004 U-19 and 2010 U-20 crowns), will be broadcast live on ESPN2 and ESPN3 starting at 2:50 a.m. ET. Fans can also follow the match on ussoccer.com’s MatchTracker and on Twitter @ussoccer_ynt.

China PR didn’t threaten the U.S. goal for the first 18 minutes of the match, but Shen Lili buried the team’s first opportunity to take an early 1-0 lead. Lili received a cross from Han Jiayuan and buried her 19th-minute strike into the upper left corner past a helpless Bryane Heaberlin.

The U.S., which outshot China 17-3, created several chances from the left side and finally equalized in the 36th minute when Kealia Ohai got past her defender and from the end line dished to Hayes, who put a right-footed touch on the ball past China PR goalkeeper Shen Li. The goal was Hayes’ fourth of the tournament and her 16th international tally.

The USA nearly found the go-ahead goal in the 52nd minute off of Vanessa DiBernardo’s corner kick, but U.S. captain Julie Johnston’s shot hit the right post and China defender Liu Shanshan cleared the ball near the goal line.

Additional Notes:

The U.S. U-20 WNT moves to 14-1-1 in international play in 2012.

U.S. head coach Steve Swanson made a couple of starting lineup changes from the team’s opening 4-0 win against Ghana on Monday. Forward Kelly Cobb made her debut in the U-20 World Cup and Cari Roccaro got the start in the back.

Becca Wann made her U-20 World Cup debut, coming in for Maya Hayes in the 86th minute.

Unlike the USA’s first match against Ghana, which kicked off in the afternoon locally, Thursday’s match started at 7 p.m. local. That provided a cooler environment for the U.S. and China, though temperatures were still in the mid-80s.

The U.S. has allowed only four goals this year in 15 international matches.

Heading into Thursday’s match, China PR represented the only team that the U.S. failed to score against in a FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup. In the 2006 semifinals, China prevailed in penalties after the two sides played to a scoreless draw through regulation and overtime. In 2008, China PR won its group match against the USA 2-0.

In Thursday’s other Group D match, Lina Magull scored the game-winner in second-half stoppage time to lead Germany to a quarterfinal berth past Ghana.